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Gypsies are technically Indians and yes, they are a problem.triniterribletim wrote:Dohplaydat wrote:thecloud1234 wrote:Anyone have experience working in Germany as a Trini expatriate? If yes ,
Do the ppl look like they like brown ppl
Are their domestic workers you can hire?
Generally is the regular man in the street speak German only?
Is the food healthy vs...doubles, kfc, black pudding, burger & fries......our staples are wheat flour and rice.... Carbs like eddoes,potato, yam, cassava,
While I at it....anyone know how working in houston could be for Trini?
Most Germans aren't overtly racist, but they do regard native Germans and Swiss to be intellectually superior.
Food was alright, lots of basic cafes, German bakeries tend to sell stuff that's more savory than sweet. Quite liked it. The beer is incredible, beer steins are massive lol. Kebab shops every too, lots of Turkish people in Germany. Indian food is plentiful but often not great compared to London. You'll get burger and fries.
Most Germans do know of Trinidad as we made it to their world cup, but most think we're an African country.
You not getting those carbs there, it's lots of potatoes, turnips, other root vegetables that aren't great.
Never been to Houston but some Trini friends there love it
Unless you're a Gypsy, most people in Europe won't have a problem with you. The moment I touched down in Rome, the car driver said in heavily accented English after asking where I was from "You are foreigner, so listen well, we have things called Gypsy here, do not make eye contact, do not fall for their tricks and do not give them money!". People from some Balkans countries thought I was a Gypsy, until I showed them my passport and then they were very friendly instead of apprehensive. If it's one thing all Europeans will openly hate, it's Gypsies.
Paris is a very dirty and disgusting city, the French are very rude. Will never visit that city again. It not a place to visit and is all hype. French are unhygienic.Dohplaydat wrote:Paris have endless Senegalese scammers too. Roma women are some of the sexiest around, guys do not fall for it. You will be missing your walket in no time at all.
zoom rader wrote:Paris is a very dirty and disgusting city, the French are very rude. Will never visit that city again. It not a place to visit and is all hype. French are unhygienic.Dohplaydat wrote:Paris have endless Senegalese scammers too. Roma women are some of the sexiest around, guys do not fall for it. You will be missing your walket in no time at all.
Worth visiting is Switzerland, very expensive but really kool people. The French speaking part are very welcoming and will speak English with u. In France they refuse to speak English with you.
Germany, visited a few cities and was ok as a tourist, don't know what it is like to work and live there. Visited Dachau concentration camp, and its an eye opener .
Austria, another kool and welcoming country. Vennia is fab.
Norway, a lil boring, not much to do and very expensive. My offshore days had to go there when choppers could not land in UK due to bad weather.
Spain, some really beautiful cities and will be exploring some more next year.
Italy, stay away from Rome and Venice they all hype and very touristy. Cheap food and best wines. Doggy migrants so beware.
AlphaMan wrote:zoom rader wrote:Paris is a very dirty and disgusting city, the French are very rude. Will never visit that city again. It not a place to visit and is all hype. French are unhygienic.Dohplaydat wrote:Paris have endless Senegalese scammers too. Roma women are some of the sexiest around, guys do not fall for it. You will be missing your walket in no time at all.
Worth visiting is Switzerland, very expensive but really kool people. The French speaking part are very welcoming and will speak English with u. In France they refuse to speak English with you.
Germany, visited a few cities and was ok as a tourist, don't know what it is like to work and live there. Visited Dachau concentration camp, and its an eye opener .
Austria, another kool and welcoming country. Vennia is fab.
Norway, a lil boring, not much to do and very expensive. My offshore days had to go there when choppers could not land in UK due to bad weather.
Spain, some really beautiful cities and will be exploring some more next year.
Italy, stay away from Rome and Venice they all hype and very touristy. Cheap food and best wines. Doggy migrants so beware.
Would you recommend Switzerland as a good destination to permanently migrate to?
Dohplaydat wrote:AlphaMan wrote:zoom rader wrote:Paris is a very dirty and disgusting city, the French are very rude. Will never visit that city again. It not a place to visit and is all hype. French are unhygienic.Dohplaydat wrote:Paris have endless Senegalese scammers too. Roma women are some of the sexiest around, guys do not fall for it. You will be missing your walket in no time at all.
Worth visiting is Switzerland, very expensive but really kool people. The French speaking part are very welcoming and will speak English with u. In France they refuse to speak English with you.
Germany, visited a few cities and was ok as a tourist, don't know what it is like to work and live there. Visited Dachau concentration camp, and its an eye opener .
Austria, another kool and welcoming country. Vennia is fab.
Norway, a lil boring, not much to do and very expensive. My offshore days had to go there when choppers could not land in UK due to bad weather.
Spain, some really beautiful cities and will be exploring some more next year.
Italy, stay away from Rome and Venice they all hype and very touristy. Cheap food and best wines. Doggy migrants so beware.
Would you recommend Switzerland as a good destination to permanently migrate to?
100% yes, they've got some of the best quality life, swiss apls are gorgeous, beautiful lakes.
Salaries are very high in Switzerland too. German side like Lucerne and Zürich are beautiful with great food and culture. Haven't spent much time on the French side but it also looked amazing.
It's expensive AF though, maybe not Iceland or Norway expensive but close.
triniterribletim wrote:Dohplaydat wrote:AlphaMan wrote:zoom rader wrote:Paris is a very dirty and disgusting city, the French are very rude. Will never visit that city again. It not a place to visit and is all hype. French are unhygienic.Dohplaydat wrote:Paris have endless Senegalese scammers too. Roma women are some of the sexiest around, guys do not fall for it. You will be missing your walket in no time at all.
Worth visiting is Switzerland, very expensive but really kool people. The French speaking part are very welcoming and will speak English with u. In France they refuse to speak English with you.
Germany, visited a few cities and was ok as a tourist, don't know what it is like to work and live there. Visited Dachau concentration camp, and its an eye opener .
Austria, another kool and welcoming country. Vennia is fab.
Norway, a lil boring, not much to do and very expensive. My offshore days had to go there when choppers could not land in UK due to bad weather.
Spain, some really beautiful cities and will be exploring some more next year.
Italy, stay away from Rome and Venice they all hype and very touristy. Cheap food and best wines. Doggy migrants so beware.
Would you recommend Switzerland as a good destination to permanently migrate to?
100% yes, they've got some of the best quality life, swiss apls are gorgeous, beautiful lakes.
Salaries are very high in Switzerland too. German side like Lucerne and Zürich are beautiful with great food and culture. Haven't spent much time on the French side but it also looked amazing.
It's expensive AF though, maybe not Iceland or Norway expensive but close.
Switzerland is much more expensive than Scandinavia. You know somewhere is expensive when people border hop for groceries. There is nowhere in the world where I felt poorer than in Switzerland. I just went back to France after knocking around for half a day. For comparison between Norway and Switzerland.
Consumer Prices in Zurich are 53.5% higher than in Oslo (without rent)
Consumer Prices Including Rent in Zurich are 70.4% higher than in Oslo
Rent Prices in Zurich are 116.7% higher than in Oslo
Restaurant Prices in Zurich are 47.8% higher than in Oslo
Groceries Prices in Zurich are 60.2% higher than in Oslo
I did some research on migration, and it's not very straightforward.AlphaMan wrote:zoom rader wrote:Paris is a very dirty and disgusting city, the French are very rude. Will never visit that city again. It not a place to visit and is all hype. French are unhygienic.Dohplaydat wrote:Paris have endless Senegalese scammers too. Roma women are some of the sexiest around, guys do not fall for it. You will be missing your walket in no time at all.
Worth visiting is Switzerland, very expensive but really kool people. The French speaking part are very welcoming and will speak English with u. In France they refuse to speak English with you.
Germany, visited a few cities and was ok as a tourist, don't know what it is like to work and live there. Visited Dachau concentration camp, and its an eye opener .
Austria, another kool and welcoming country. Vennia is fab.
Norway, a lil boring, not much to do and very expensive. My offshore days had to go there when choppers could not land in UK due to bad weather.
Spain, some really beautiful cities and will be exploring some more next year.
Italy, stay away from Rome and Venice they all hype and very touristy. Cheap food and best wines. Doggy migrants so beware.
Would you recommend Switzerland as a good destination to permanently migrate to?
Portugal has one of the easiest avenues for young, older folk and retirees.alfa wrote:Apart from the culture and varying cost of living, salaries etc what is long term living like in some of these European countries? In terms of owning a house and property, raising a family etc? Seems like a cool place for young professionals to work and live but what are the prospects for the older folks who want to live a stable life?
zoom rader wrote:Portugal has one of the easiest avenues for young, older folk and retirees.alfa wrote:Apart from the culture and varying cost of living, salaries etc what is long term living like in some of these European countries? In terms of owning a house and property, raising a family etc? Seems like a cool place for young professionals to work and live but what are the prospects for the older folks who want to live a stable life?
You buy a property, and residency follows. Language is a barrier, if u know some Spanish it's a big help.
If u have a Portuguese Grand Parent, u in luck.pugboy wrote:zoom know he stuff
portugal is a pretty benign country and more than a few trinis with roots there have been able to get back a passport which is worth a lot being eu
UK is probably the easiest country to migrate to.Dohplaydat wrote:zoom rader wrote:Portugal has one of the easiest avenues for young, older folk and retirees.alfa wrote:Apart from the culture and varying cost of living, salaries etc what is long term living like in some of these European countries? In terms of owning a house and property, raising a family etc? Seems like a cool place for young professionals to work and live but what are the prospects for the older folks who want to live a stable life?
You buy a property, and residency follows. Language is a barrier, if u know some Spanish it's a big help.
UK isn't that hard to get into either, tier 1 visas are attainable, tier 2 as well. all have easy paths to citizenship and ILR.
Problem with Portugal is low salaries, though Lisbon is an fantastic place and very livable.
AlphaMan wrote:I take it that to comfortably migrate into these eu destinations( Portugal, Switzerland Etc) you have to have some decent capital and in US dollars too right..
How you migrating with a credit card to finance your stay over there...
In a nutshell yes.AlphaMan wrote:I take it that to comfortably migrate into these eu destinations( Portugal, Switzerland Etc) you have to have some decent capital and in US dollars too right..
How you migrating with a credit card to finance your stay over there...
zoom rader wrote:In a nutshell yes.AlphaMan wrote:I take it that to comfortably migrate into these eu destinations( Portugal, Switzerland Etc) you have to have some decent capital and in US dollars too right..
How you migrating with a credit card to finance your stay over there...
U have to understand these countries need to protect their boarders. You can't have economic migrants just coming in. EU is not Trinidad
But there are ways if u are a young person to get a working visa/school and build urself from there.
Just research
Dohplaydat wrote:zoom rader wrote:In a nutshell yes.AlphaMan wrote:I take it that to comfortably migrate into these eu destinations( Portugal, Switzerland Etc) you have to have some decent capital and in US dollars too right..
How you migrating with a credit card to finance your stay over there...
U have to understand these countries need to protect their boarders. You can't have economic migrants just coming in. EU is not Trinidad
But there are ways if u are a young person to get a working visa/school and build urself from there.
Just research
I'd recommend getting a degree that's internationally recognised (UWI is but unless you have multinational experience they treating you like you have A-levels alone) and getting through to the UK. After 5 years you can get ILR then shortly after citizenship.
UK is a great platform to be an expat in other countries.
zoom rader wrote:If u have a Portuguese Grand Parent, u in luck.pugboy wrote:zoom know he stuff
portugal is a pretty benign country and more than a few trinis with roots there have been able to get back a passport which is worth a lot being eu
I know of one such trini person that did this and got citizenship.
zoom rader wrote:Portugal has one of the easiest avenues for young, older folk and retirees.alfa wrote:Apart from the culture and varying cost of living, salaries etc what is long term living like in some of these European countries? In terms of owning a house and property, raising a family etc? Seems like a cool place for young professionals to work and live but what are the prospects for the older folks who want to live a stable life?
You buy a property, and residency follows. Language is a barrier, if u know some Spanish it's a big help.
AlphaMan wrote:Dohplaydat wrote:zoom rader wrote:In a nutshell yes.AlphaMan wrote:I take it that to comfortably migrate into these eu destinations( Portugal, Switzerland Etc) you have to have some decent capital and in US dollars too right..
How you migrating with a credit card to finance your stay over there...
U have to understand these countries need to protect their boarders. You can't have economic migrants just coming in. EU is not Trinidad
But there are ways if u are a young person to get a working visa/school and build urself from there.
Just research
I'd recommend getting a degree that's internationally recognised (UWI is but unless you have multinational experience they treating you like you have A-levels alone) and getting through to the UK. After 5 years you can get ILR then shortly after citizenship.
UK is a great platform to be an expat in other countries.
What's it like to be in another country away from all your trini family and friends?
Does it affect your mental state of mind? Loneliness etc..
In the UK it does affect u in a way. Some trinis there, students, workers or families stay in a close loop with other trinis. It takes a couple of months to grow friends outside of Trinidad.AlphaMan wrote:Dohplaydat wrote:zoom rader wrote:In a nutshell yes.AlphaMan wrote:I take it that to comfortably migrate into these eu destinations( Portugal, Switzerland Etc) you have to have some decent capital and in US dollars too right..
How you migrating with a credit card to finance your stay over there...
U have to understand these countries need to protect their boarders. You can't have economic migrants just coming in. EU is not Trinidad
But there are ways if u are a young person to get a working visa/school and build urself from there.
Just research
I'd recommend getting a degree that's internationally recognised (UWI is but unless you have multinational experience they treating you like you have A-levels alone) and getting through to the UK. After 5 years you can get ILR then shortly after citizenship.
UK is a great platform to be an expat in other countries.
What's it like to be in another country away from all your trini family and friends?
Does it affect your mental state of mind? Loneliness etc..
zoom rader wrote:In the UK it does affect u in a way. Some trinis there, students, workers or families stay in a close loop with other trinis. It takes a couple of months to grow friends outside of Trinidad.AlphaMan wrote:Dohplaydat wrote:zoom rader wrote:In a nutshell yes.AlphaMan wrote:I take it that to comfortably migrate into these eu destinations( Portugal, Switzerland Etc) you have to have some decent capital and in US dollars too right..
How you migrating with a credit card to finance your stay over there...
U have to understand these countries need to protect their boarders. You can't have economic migrants just coming in. EU is not Trinidad
But there are ways if u are a young person to get a working visa/school and build urself from there.
Just research
I'd recommend getting a degree that's internationally recognised (UWI is but unless you have multinational experience they treating you like you have A-levels alone) and getting through to the UK. After 5 years you can get ILR then shortly after citizenship.
UK is a great platform to be an expat in other countries.
What's it like to be in another country away from all your trini family and friends?
Does it affect your mental state of mind? Loneliness etc..
Let just say UK folk like to keep to themselves and they don't really care to mingle with u, unless if u belong to a social circle.
In the UK u can go to school or work and know these people for years, but that is as far as it goes. Very rarely will u get invited to their homes or things like celebrations, wedding, parties ect.
However they will invite u to pubs/bars maybe restaurants.
You will find ethic groups stick to themselves
Gypsies are technically Indians and yes, they are a problem.triniterribletim wrote:Dohplaydat wrote:thecloud1234 wrote:Anyone have experience working in Germany as a Trini expatriate? If yes ,
Do the ppl look like they like brown ppl
Are their domestic workers you can hire?
Generally is the regular man in the street speak German only?
Is the food healthy vs...doubles, kfc, black pudding, burger & fries......our staples are wheat flour and rice.... Carbs like eddoes,potato, yam, cassava,
While I at it....anyone know how working in houston could be for Trini?
Most Germans aren't overtly racist, but they do regard native Germans and Swiss to be intellectually superior.
Food was alright, lots of basic cafes, German bakeries tend to sell stuff that's more savory than sweet. Quite liked it. The beer is incredible, beer steins are massive lol. Kebab shops every too, lots of Turkish people in Germany. Indian food is plentiful but often not great compared to London. You'll get burger and fries.
Most Germans do know of Trinidad as we made it to their world cup, but most think we're an African country.
You not getting those carbs there, it's lots of potatoes, turnips, other root vegetables that aren't great.
Never been to Houston but some Trini friends there love it
Unless you're a Gypsy, most people in Europe won't have a problem with you. The moment I touched down in Rome, the car driver said in heavily accented English after asking where I was from "You are foreigner, so listen well, we have things called Gypsy here, do not make eye contact, do not fall for their tricks and do not give them money!". People from some Balkans countries thought I was a Gypsy, until I showed them my passport and then they were very friendly instead of apprehensive. If it's one thing all Europeans will openly hate, it's Gypsies.
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